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sejakuvara
@sejakuvara (20)
China • Age 54
Joined myLot 16 years ago
All Activity
Discussions (10)
Responses (10)
Comments (0)
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Likes (61)
Followers (3)
Following (2)
sejakuvara's Likes
sejakuvara
liked this
•
12 Mar 09
what do u know about headache?
patodra
@patodra
(21)
•
China
12 Mar 09
In medicine a headache or cephalalgia is a symptom of a number of different conditions of the head and sometimes neck. Some of the causes are benign while others are medical emergencies. It ranks among the most common pain...
medicine headache
4 responses
•
4 people
sejakuvadra
The classification of headaches has a rich history. The first recorded system that resembles the modern ones was published by Thomas Willis, in De Cephalagia in 1672. In 1787 Christian Baur generally divided headaches into idiopathic (primary headaches) and...
12 Mar 09
•
4 people
sejakuvara
liked this
•
12 Mar 09
what do u know about headache?
patodra
@patodra
(21)
•
China
12 Mar 09
In medicine a headache or cephalalgia is a symptom of a number of different conditions of the head and sometimes neck. Some of the causes are benign while others are medical emergencies. It ranks among the most common pain...
4 responses
•
4 people
sejakuvara
liked this
•
12 Mar 09
what do u know about epilepsy?
patodra
@patodra
(21)
•
China
12 Mar 09
Epilepsy (from the Greek ep?????a /epili?psia/ ) is a common chronic neurological disorder characterized by recurrent unprovoked seizures.[1][2] These seizures are transient signs and/or symptoms of abnormal, excessive or...
medical eilepsy
12 responses
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4 people
sejakuvadra
Epilepsies are classified in five ways: By their first cause (or etiology). By the observable manifestations of the seizures, known as semiology. By the location in the brain where the seizures originate. As a part of discrete, identifiable medical...
12 Mar 09
•
4 people
sejakuvara
liked this
•
12 Mar 09
what do u know about epilepsy?
patodra
@patodra
(21)
•
China
12 Mar 09
Epilepsy (from the Greek ep?????a /epili?psia/ ) is a common chronic neurological disorder characterized by recurrent unprovoked seizures.[1][2] These seizures are transient signs and/or symptoms of abnormal, excessive or...
12 responses
•
4 people
sejakuvara
liked this
•
12 Mar 09
what do u know about migraine?
patodra
@patodra
(21)
•
China
12 Mar 09
Migraine is a neurological syndrome characterized by altered bodily perceptions, headaches, and nausea. Physiologically, the migraine headache is a neurological condition more common to women than to men. Etymologically, the...
medicine migraine
5 responses
•
4 people
sejakuvadra
symptoms include nausea, vomiting, photophobia (increased sensitivity to bright light), and hyperacusis (increased sensitivity to noise); [2][3][4] approximately one third of people who suffer migraine headache perceive an aura — visual, olfactory — announcing...
12 Mar 09
•
4 people
sejakuvara
liked this
•
12 Mar 09
what do u know about migraine?
patodra
@patodra
(21)
•
China
12 Mar 09
Migraine is a neurological syndrome characterized by altered bodily perceptions, headaches, and nausea. Physiologically, the migraine headache is a neurological condition more common to women than to men. Etymologically, the...
5 responses
•
4 people
sejakuvara
liked this
•
12 Mar 09
what do u know about SAH?
patodra
@patodra
(21)
•
China
12 Mar 09
A subarachnoid hemorrhage (SAH, pronounced /?s?b?'rækn??d 'h?m(?)r?d?/, or subarachnoid haemorrhage in British English) is bleeding into the subarachnoid space—the area between the arachnoid membrane and the pia mater surrounding...
medicine sah
4 responses
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4 people
sejakuvadra
Symptoms of SAH include a severe headache with a rapid onset ("thunderclap headache"), vomiting, confusion or a lowered level of consciousness, and sometimes seizures.[1] The diagnosis is generally confirmed with a CT scan of the head, or occasionally by...
12 Mar 09
•
4 people
sejakuvara
liked this
•
12 Mar 09
what do u know about SAH?
patodra
@patodra
(21)
•
China
12 Mar 09
A subarachnoid hemorrhage (SAH, pronounced /?s?b?'rækn??d 'h?m(?)r?d?/, or subarachnoid haemorrhage in British English) is bleeding into the subarachnoid space—the area between the arachnoid membrane and the pia mater surrounding...
4 responses
•
4 people
sejakuvara
liked this
•
12 Mar 09
what do u know about multiple sclerosis?
patodra
@patodra
(21)
•
China
12 Mar 09
Multiple sclerosis (abbreviated MS, also known as disseminated sclerosis or encephalomyelitis disseminata) is an autoimmune condition in which the immune system attacks the central nervous system, leading to demyelination.[1]...
medicine multiple sclerosis
4 responses
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4 people
sejakuvadra
MS affects the ability of nerve cells in the brain and spinal cord to communicate with each other. Nerve cells communicate by sending electrical signals called action potentials down long fibers called axons, which are wrapped in an insulating substance called...
12 Mar 09
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4 people
sejakuvara
liked this
•
12 Mar 09
what do u know about multiple sclerosis?
patodra
@patodra
(21)
•
China
12 Mar 09
Multiple sclerosis (abbreviated MS, also known as disseminated sclerosis or encephalomyelitis disseminata) is an autoimmune condition in which the immune system attacks the central nervous system, leading to demyelination.[1]...
4 responses
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4 people
sejakuvara
liked this
•
12 Mar 09
what do u know about MG?
patodra
@patodra
(21)
•
China
12 Mar 09
Myasthenia gravis (literally "serious muscle-weakness"; from Greek µ?? "muscle", "weakness", and Latin gravis "serious"; abbreviated MG) is a neuromuscular disease leading to fluctuating muscle weakness and fatiguability. It is an...
medicine mg
5 responses
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4 people
sejakuvadra
The most widely accepted classification of myasthenia gravis is the Myasthenia Gravis Foundation of America Clinical Classification:[2] Class I: Any eye muscle weakness, possible ptosis, no other evidence of muscle weakness elsewhere Class II: Eye muscle...
12 Mar 09
•
4 people
sejakuvara
liked this
•
12 Mar 09
what do u know about MG?
patodra
@patodra
(21)
•
China
12 Mar 09
Myasthenia gravis (literally "serious muscle-weakness"; from Greek µ?? "muscle", "weakness", and Latin gravis "serious"; abbreviated MG) is a neuromuscular disease leading to fluctuating muscle weakness and fatiguability. It is an...
5 responses
•
4 people
sejakuvara
liked this
•
12 Mar 09
what do u know about TIA?
patodra
@patodra
(21)
•
China
12 Mar 09
A transient ischemic attack (TIA, often colloquially referred to as “mini stroke”) is caused by the changes in the blood supply to a particular area of the brain, resulting in brief neurologic dysfunction that persists, by...
medicine tia
4 responses
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4 people
sejakuvadra
Symptoms vary widely from person to person, depending on the area of the brain involved. The most frequent symptoms include temporary loss of vision (typically amaurosis fugax); difficulty speaking (aphasia); weakness on one side of the body (hemiparesis); and...
12 Mar 09
•
4 people
sejakuvara
liked this
•
12 Mar 09
what do u know about TIA?
patodra
@patodra
(21)
•
China
12 Mar 09
A transient ischemic attack (TIA, often colloquially referred to as “mini stroke”) is caused by the changes in the blood supply to a particular area of the brain, resulting in brief neurologic dysfunction that persists, by...
4 responses
•
4 people
sejakuvara
liked this
•
12 Mar 09
what do u know about cerebral infarction?
patodra
@patodra
(21)
•
China
12 Mar 09
A cerebral infarction is the ischemic kind of stroke due to a disturbance in the blood vessels supplying blood to the brain. It can be atherothrombotic or embolic.[1] From stroke caused by cerebral infarction two other kinds of...
medicine cerebral infarction
4 responses
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4 people
sejakuvadra
symptoms, the stroke episode is classified as total anterior circulation infarct (TACI), partial anterior circulation infarct (PACI), lacunar infarct (LACI) or posterior circulation infarct (POCI). These four entities predict the extent of the stroke, the area...
12 Mar 09
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4 people
sejakuvara
liked this
•
12 Mar 09
what do u know about cerebral infarction?
patodra
@patodra
(21)
•
China
12 Mar 09
A cerebral infarction is the ischemic kind of stroke due to a disturbance in the blood vessels supplying blood to the brain. It can be atherothrombotic or embolic.[1] From stroke caused by cerebral infarction two other kinds of...
4 responses
•
4 people
sejakuvara
liked this
•
12 Mar 09
what do u know about diarrhea , in a medical way?
patodra
@patodra
(21)
•
China
12 Mar 09
about me.. In medicine, diarrhea, also spelled diarrhoea (see spelling differences), is characterized by frequent loose or liquid bowel movements. The spelling of "diarrhea" is an appropriation of the Greek "diarrhoia" meaning "a...
4 responses
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4 people
sejakuvadra
Diarrhea commonly results from gastroenteritis caused by viral infections, parasites or bacterial toxins.[2] In sanitary living conditions where there is ample food and a supply of clean water, an otherwise healthy patient usually recovers from viral...
12 Mar 09
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3 people
sejakuvara
liked this
•
12 Mar 09
what do u know about diarrhea , in a medical way?
patodra
@patodra
(21)
•
China
12 Mar 09
about me.. In medicine, diarrhea, also spelled diarrhoea (see spelling differences), is characterized by frequent loose or liquid bowel movements. The spelling of "diarrhea" is an appropriation of the Greek "diarrhoia" meaning "a...
4 responses
•
4 people
sejakuvara
liked this
•
12 Mar 09
what do u know about bell palsy?
sejakuvara
@sejakuvara
(20)
•
China
12 Mar 09
Bell's palsy is a paralysis of cranial nerve VII (the facial nerve) resulting in inability to control facial muscles on the affected side. Several conditions can cause a facial paralysis, e.g., brain tumor, stroke, and Lyme...
medicine
7 responses
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5 people
sejakuvadra
Clinicians should determine whether the forehead muscles are spared. Due to an anatomical peculiarity, forehead muscles receive innervation from both sides of the brain. The forehead can therefore still be wrinkled by a patient whose facial palsy is caused by...
12 Mar 09
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1 person